No. At that time, there was no Australian government.
The Australian landscape was mainly flat. While there were isolated streams and bodies of water, most of Australia was blanketed under sand, dust, and vegetation. The settlers, however, would build horse ranches, along with residential and commercial communities. This, of course, was under the mandate of the British government.
No, rabbits are not native to Australia. They were introduced to the continent by European settlers and are considered an invasive species in Australia.
by learning how to grow crops in the Australian atmosphere and many more reasons
Simply because they had never been to Australia before and much of the Australian wildlife does not exist anywhere else.
The South Australian Colonisation Act was passed by the British Parliament in 1834, and the first settlers arrived in 1836. South Australia is the only state in Australia not to have been founded by convicts. Governor John Hindmarsh arrived in the new colony on the HMS Buffalo, accompanied only by free settlers, who were English.
By ships chartered to carry them by either the British Government or non-government agencies/ church societies.
The people who were to build the government were convicts.
The first type of government which oversaw the convicts and new settlers in New South Wales was a Colonial government. It was completely under the authority of the British government, utilising its laws, and following the same system. The Governor in Australia had to report all activity to the British authorities.
The first people to settle in Australia were the Aborigines and they came from the Indian subcontinent. The first "official" European settlers in Australia were the group of convicts, officers and marines who came out from England on the First Fleet in 1788. However, there is strong evidence to suggest that the first European settlers in Australia were Dutch sailors stranded after being shipwrecked off the Western Australian coast in the early 1600s.
The first people to settle in Australia were the Aborigines and they came from the Indian subcontinent. The first "official" European settlers in Australia were the group of convicts, officers and marines who came out from England on the First Fleet in 1788. However, there is strong evidence to suggest that the first European settlers in Australia were Dutch sailors stranded after being shipwrecked off the Western Australian coast in the early 1600s.
Convicts formed a large percentage of the Australian population for the first few decades of settlement.
The South Australian Colonisation Act was passed by the British Parliament in 1834, and the first settlers arrived in 1836.